Department of Astronomy
University of Florida
211 Bryant Space Science Center
PO Box 112055
Gainesville, FL, 32611-2055, USA
Phone: (352) 392-2052
Fax: (352) 392-5089
Email: Ename@astro.ufl.edu
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Graduate Studies
For more information you can always send an email to gradapps@astro.ufl.edu
Guidelines
These ghidelines represent the
recommendations of the Astronomy Department faculty for students
wishing to pursue masters (M.Sc.)
and doctoral (Ph.D.)
degrees in astronomy at the University of
Florida. Exceptions to these requirements will be considered on a
case-by-case basis. For additional information, see the UF Graduate
Catalog and
our page of Graduate
Astronomy Courses. (Our
graduate course listing page supercedes the Graduate Catalog.)
CONTENTS
| Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
|
|
|
|
During
the first three years of the Graduate
Program, Ph.D. students will be required to take:
- 10
graded
lecture courses
- 1 research
project
- a comprehensive
written exam
- an oral
candidacy exam
Each of
these
requirements is considered a milestone in the path to obtain a Ph.D.
degree. Students must pass successfully each of these milestones.
Failure to do so may result in the student being denied continuation in
the Ph.D. program.
In
addition,
students will be required to take:
- 1
non-graded
course: Frontiers + Journal Club + Colloquium
I. GRADED LECTURE COURSES
- Students
are
required to take 6 core and 4 elective courses.
- Students
are
expected to take at least 2 elective courses offered by the Department.
In addition, up to 2 elective courses in other
departments of Natural and Computing Sciences can also be taken.
This should be considered as a departmental guideline for students on
their choice of elective courses. The final choice of elective courses
will require the written approval of the Graduate Advisor in advance of
registration.
- Schedule
| First Semester: |
2 core + 1 elective |
| Second Semester: |
1 core + 1 elective |
| Third Semester: |
2 core + 1 elective |
| Fourth Semester: |
1 core + 1 elective |
- The
grading
system adopted for each course (mid-term + final written exams, class
assignments, oral presentations, etc.) will be decided by the faculty
member teaching that course.
- The CLAS policy
requires students to
obtain at least a "B" average in their courses to continue in the
Graduate Program.
- In
addition,
the Department requires students to obtain at least a "B"
average in the core courses to continue in the Ph.D. Program.
II. RESEARCH PROJECT
- The
Research
Project will be graded. It can be considered as AST 6905 which can be
taken for 3 credits per semester.
- Students
are
required to provide a written paper at the end of the project
describing the results. The paper will be similar to a Conference
Proceeding or Journal Letter in scope, length, and writing style. This
paper will be graded by a Research Committee. A "B" or higher grade is
required for students to continue in the Ph.D. program.
- In
addition,
students are required to make a short (20-30 minutes) oral
presentation of their projects in front of the Department. This
will help not only the students to practice towards their oral
candidacy and dissertation exams but will also provide an opportunity
for all faculty members
to
participate/comment on their research activities.
- The
Research
Committee consists of three faculty members,
one of which is the student's project supervisor.
- The
Research
Committee will meet with the student four times during the duration of
the research project. The student is required to provide the
following information at each meeting:
| First Meeting: |
Written abstract and
outline of intended research (<1 page) |
| Second Meeting: |
Oral progress report |
| Third Meeting: |
Written progress report
(2-3 pages) |
| Fourth Meeting: |
Written "Journal style"
paper (>5-10 pages) |
- Schedule
| Second Semester: |
Selection of: Project
topic, Supervisor, and Research
Committee |
| First Summer: |
Research Project (S/U or
AST 6905)
First meeting: end of summer |
| Mid-third Semester: |
Second meeting |
| Fourth Semester: |
Research Project (AST
6905)
Third meeting: beginning of semester
Fourth meeting and grades: April 1
Oral presentation: 1 week after fourth meeting, in two consecutive days:
Thursday (instead of the faculty meeting) and
Friday (instead of the colloquium). |
III. COMPREHENSIVE WRITTEN EXAM
The CLAS requires a written
exam for Ph.D. students.
- Date:
Two
weeks after the end of finals in the 4th semester.
- Content:
only the subjects taught in the 6 core courses.
- Questions:
there will be 12 questions, i.e., 2 questions per core course for the
students to choose one.
- Examples
of
the exam, including both questions and answers, will be made available
to the students.
- Duration:
the exam will be designed to be completed in 3 hours.
The students should be given 4 hours to finish.
- Examining
committee: 6 faculty members teaching the core courses.
- Grading:
The
Examining Committee will set the level that is considered adequate to
pass the exam each year.
- Should
students fail the exam, they may petition to retake it. This may be
granted by the Examining Committee based on a variety of factors,
including the students' performance on the exam, in classes, and in
their research.
IV. ORAL CANDIDACY EXAM
V. FRONTIERS + JOURNAL CLUB +
COLLOQUIUM
All
students
are expected attend the Colloquium and
to attend and participate in the Journal
Club. In the Spring semester of their first year, all students must
formally register for the Colloquium (AST 6920, 1 cr), Frontiers of
Astronomy seminar (AST 6935, 1 cr), and the Journal Club (AST 6936, 1
cr).
- These
courses will be S/U.
- Schedule:
Every spring semester
The
University requires all graduate students to declare their desire to
obtain a M.Sc. degree before the end of the third semester.
The CLAS policy does not
require M.Sc. students to take a Comprehensive Written Exam.
- During
the 2
years duration of the Graduate Program, M.Sc. students will be required
to take:
- 10
graded lecture courses
- 1 research
project
- an oral
exam
- As in
the
Ph.D. case, each of these requirements is considered a milestone in the
path to obtain a M.Sc. degree. Students must pass successfully each of
these milestones. Failure to do so may result in the student being
denied their M.Sc. degree.
- Students
pursuing a M.Sc. degree by thesis should declare it before the end
of the third semester. In addition to the three requirements above,
these students are required to present:
- a
thesis.
I. GRADED LECTURE COURSES
Same
conditions
as in the Ph.D. program apply except:
- Students
are not required to have at least a "B" average in core courses.
II. RESEARCH PROJECT
Same
conditions
as in the Ph.D. program apply except:
- Students
are required to obtain at least a "C" in their written paper.
- The oral
presentation becomes part of their oral exam.
III. ORAL EXAM
- Date:
one
week after the end of the fourth semester.
- It will
consist of two parts:
- A
short
(20-30 minutes) oral presentation of their projects in front of
the Department.
- A
short
(30-45 minutes) round of questions by the Research Committee. These
questions will be mainly—but not exclusively—focused on fundamental
concepts related to the research project.
IV. THESIS
- Students are
required to present the thesis to their Research Committee
following the instructions given by the Graduate School.
- Date:
One
week after the end of the fourth semester.
| Requirement |
Ph.D. |
M.Sc. |
| Core Courses (Aver.) |
>=B |
N/A |
| All Courses (Aver.) |
>=B |
>=B |
| Research Project |
>=B |
>=C |
| Written Exam |
>=B |
N/A |
| Oral Exam |
Pass |
Pass |
| Dissertation |
Pass |
N/A |
|